Should tuned discs be legal for tournament use?

So I was hoping to play in an upcoming tourney this weekend (plans have since changed and I won't be able to make it................unless someone wants to sponsor me ) and I had a thought in my head about whether or not tuning discs was legal. So I posted the question on the PDGA discussion forum and got swamped with people from both sides.

Some arguments were saying "Absolutely NO" since rule 802.01c says Players may not make post-production modification of discs which alter their original flight characteristics.

However other said it was perfectly fine because no weight was removed, no tool marks, the properties of the disc are the same, you can get the same results from improper storage over time, etc.

Anyway, one of the posters brought the question up to the PDGA Rules Committee for some sort of ruling. Here's what they said.
Dear Dan,

Thanks for writing!!!

I'd say so, but any disc's legality can be challenged by any competitor and the TD makes the final call.

Yours Sincerely;

Carlton Howard
PDGA Rules Committee Chairman

So now my question is to you all of the fine readers on this board (which is where I spend most of my time since I can't stand the bickering that goes on on the PDGA site). If you were a TD and someone brought up the topic of tuned discs what would you rule? Legal or Illegal?

I have not TD'ed in years, but if someone had complained to me about a tuned disc I would have called the guy in question over and asked to see his tuned disc. I would have then proceed to pretend to examine the tuned disc for 10 or 15 seconds, at the conclusion of which I would have whacked the complainant over the head with said disc and told him to quit wasting my time.

Working Stiff wrote:I have not TD'ed in years, but if someone had complained to me about a tuned disc I would have called the guy in question over and asked to see his tuned disc. I would have then proceed to pretend to examine the tuned disc for 10 or 15 seconds, at the conclusion of which I would have whacked the complainant over the head with said disc and told him to quit wasting my time.

Working Stiff wrote:I have not TD'ed in years, but if someone had complained to me about a tuned disc I would have called the guy in question over and asked to see his tuned disc. I would have then proceed to pretend to examine the tuned disc for 10 or 15 seconds, at the conclusion of which I would have whacked the complainant over the head with said disc and told him to quit wasting my time.

"And if he was mud stomping you with a Teerex instead of a Wraith, it wouldn't?"

"Well..."

"So, basically, what you're telling me here is that when it's obvious you can't win on skill you'll look for every opportunity, even being a whining, conniving little douche to try and keep your betters from beating you."

"..."

That's about how that conversation will go if I ever have to have it as a TD, but I'm slightly more caustic than most...

I dont' like the idea of disc tuning. Just learn how to throw the damn disc or find a disc that does what you need it to do without having to post production modify it.
If you want your wraith to fly like a TeeRex, then buy a TeeRex for the shots you want TeeRex and use your Wraith for the shots you want it to fly like a Wraith.
What is the issue here?

I answered no, it shouldn't be legal because that was the question. I don't think it should be.

However I do have to agree it is legal because you could do the same thing to your disc by smacking a tree or a shed or hitting the cement really hard. So even if disc tuning was illegal, it wouldn't be hard to "tune" your disc and claim it smacked a tree.

As a TD I would examine the disc to make sure weight and surface treatments weren't added, if they weren't I'd say no problems here.

Fritz wrote:I dont' like the idea of disc tuning. Just learn how to throw the damn disc or find a disc that does what you need it to do without having to post production modify it.If you want your wraith to fly like a TeeRex, then buy a TeeRex for the shots you want TeeRex and use your Wraith for the shots you want it to fly like a Wraith.What is the issue here?

I answered no, it shouldn't be legal because that was the question. I don't think it should be.

However I do have to agree it is legal because you could do the same thing to your disc by smacking a tree or a shed or hitting the cement really hard. So even if disc tuning was illegal, it wouldn't be hard to "tune" your disc and claim it smacked a tree.

As a TD I would examine the disc to make sure weight and surface treatments weren't added, if they weren't I'd say no problems here.

I haven't voted, because the answers don't match the question!

I actually have the opposite view to Fritz, I think it is currently (technically) illegal, but completely undetectable without resorting to the manufacturing specs and highly accurate measuring devices, and unenforceable because you cannot tell if any changes were made through tuning or through normal wear and tear.

I think it should be legal, as the same effect can be achieved by ageing, and the act of 'restoring' a disc such as de-tacoing it is widely accepted.

I take your point about a teerex/wraith, but the most common use of this technique is to either hasten the ageing process on a new disc, or to reverse ageing on an old disc, neither of which offers any competitive advantage.

Fritz wrote:I dont' like the idea of disc tuning. Just learn how to throw the damn disc or find a disc that does what you need it to do without having to post production modify it.

I don't understand why you'd be opposed to it in such a general sense. Discs change in stability and flight to a degree as they impact and skid when thrown. Tuning a disc simply accelerates or reverses the process with a goal in mind, rather than letting the natural impact and wear be the only factors that dictate aging characteristics.

It won't make a sidewinder fly a firebird line, or vice versa, so why does it matter? I don't think it's even a question of learning how to throw the disc better or finding a different disc, as much as it is a matter of restoring some necessary stability to an old disc or accelerating the aging a little with a new one.

Fritz wrote:I dont' like the idea of disc tuning. Just learn how to throw the damn disc or find a disc that does what you need it to do without having to post production modify it.

what if you're sponsored by a manufacturer who doesn't have anything overstable?

I make due lol, amazing what hyzer + QOLF heavy will do, that and I'm really getting creative with the EXP-1. Technically I could get myself a Monster or Firebird but meh no need to really...I'm doing fine with my current bag set up.

Hurry up already with the "Orion LF-X" or whatever and the JLF darn it!

Fritz wrote:I dont' like the idea of disc tuning. Just learn how to throw the damn disc or find a disc that does what you need it to do without having to post production modify it.

I don't understand why you'd be opposed to it in such a general sense. Discs change in stability and flight to a degree as they impact and skid when thrown. Tuning a disc simply accelerates or reverses the process with a goal in mind, rather than letting the natural impact and wear be the only factors that dictate aging characteristics.

It won't make a sidewinder fly a firebird line, or vice versa, so why does it matter? I don't think it's even a question of learning how to throw the disc better or finding a different disc, as much as it is a matter of restoring some necessary stability to an old disc or accelerating the aging a little with a new one.

My basic "who cares?" philosophy is that I don't care if you DO tune a Sidewinder to fly on a Firebird line, you still had to execute the shot. Right? So why does it matter if you executed the shot with a Firebird or a tuned Sidewinder? Whichever one you used, it didn't jump out of the bag and throw itself under the basket. If it conforms to Tech specs, it's all good.

Working Stiff wrote:I have not TD'ed in years, but if someone had complained to me about a tuned disc I would have called the guy in question over and asked to see his tuned disc. I would have then proceed to pretend to examine the tuned disc for 10 or 15 seconds, at the conclusion of which I would have whacked the complainant over the head with said disc and told him to quit wasting my time.

literal LOL.

I have to agree...I have limited experience with tuning discs, but certainly it isn't an unfair competetive advantage to bend your plastic until it flies differently...if you can figure it out, more power to ya. But it's mostly the player that makes the good shot happen, not the disc. Without the thrower putting it on the right line, it won't do you a damn bit of good no matter how well it's tuned.